Craters & Other Volcanic Features

aerial view of a cinder cone showing visitor canter and road to the summit
Approximately 60,000 years ago, cinders and four lava flows formed Capulin Volcano cinder cone, rising more than 1000 feet above the surrounding landscape. Although long extinct, Capulin Volcano is dramatic evidence of the volcanic processes that shaped northeastern New Mexico.

NPS photo.

Introduction

Volcanoes are places where magma (molten rock) and gases are erupted on to Earth’s surface or into the atmosphere. The one feature that all volcanoes have is a vent; e.g., the opening where lava, tephra, fragmented rock, and/or volcanic gases are erupted.

Beyond possessing a vent, volcanoes vary greatly in size and shape. They also experience large differences in the types (e.g., compositions) of magma erupted, and in style and type of eruptions with variations in explosivity, magnitude, and volume erupted.

Volcanoes also may have a variety of other features, which in turn, have a great range in diversity of form, size, shape, and permanence.

Many volcanoes have craters at their summits and/or at the location of other vents. Some craters contain water lakes. Lakes of molten or solidified lava may exist on some volcanoes. Fumaroles and other geothermal features are a product of heat from magma reservoirs and volcanic gases and are found in many volcanic centers.

Volcanic Features

Geothermal / Hydrothermal


Last updated: September 12, 2022